Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Critique
an essay or article that
gives a critical evaluation
a serious examination and
judgment of something
Writing Critiques
Writing a critique involves more than
pointing out mistakes. It involves
conducting a systematic analysis of a
scholarly article or book and then writing
a fair and reasonable description of its
strengths and weaknesses.
TYPES OF CRITIQUES
Article or book review
assignment in an academic
class
Text:Article or book that has
already been published
Audience:Professors
Purpose:
to demonstrate your skills for
close reading and analysis
to show that you understand key
concepts in your field
to learn how to review a
manuscript for your future
professional work
Published book
review
Text:Book that has
already been published
Audience:Disciplinary
colleagues
Purpose:
to describe the books contents
to summarize the books
strengths and weaknesses
to provide a reliable
recommendation to read (or not
read) the book
Manuscript review
Text:Manuscript that has
been submitted but has not
been published yet
Audience:Journal
editorandmanuscript
authors
Purpose:
to provide the editor with an evaluation
of the manuscript
to recommend to the editor that the
article be published, revised, or
rejected
to provide the authors with
constructive feedback and reasonable
Step One: Decide on your areas of
research:
Before you begin to search for articles or books,
decide beforehand what areas you are going to
research. Make sure that you only get articles
and books in those areas, even if you come
across fascinating books in other areas. A
literature review I am currently working on, for
example, explores barriers to higher education
for undocumented students.
Step Two: Search for the
literature:
Conduct a comprehensive bibliographic
search of books and articles in your area.
Read the abstracts online and download
and/or print those articles that pertain to
your area of research. Find books in the
library that are relevant and check them
out. Set a specific time frame for how long
you will search. It should not take more
than two or three dedicated sessions.
Step Three: Find relevant
excerpts in your books and
articles:
Skim the contents of each book and article and look
specifically for these five things:
1. Claims, conclusions, and findings about the
constructs you are investigating
2. Definitions of terms
3. Calls for follow-up studies relevant to your
project
4. Gaps you notice in the literature
5. Disagreement about the constructs you are
When you find any of these five things, type the
relevant excerpt directly into a Word document.
Dont summarize, as summarizing takes longer
than simply typing the excerpt. Make sure to
note the name of the author and the page
number following each excerpt. Do this for each
article and book that you have in your stack of
literature. When you are done, print out your
excerpts.
Step Four: Code the literature
Get out a pair of scissors and cut each excerpt
out. Now, sort the pieces of paper into similar
topics. Figure out what the main themes are. Place
each excerpt into a themed pile. Make sure each
note goes into a pile. If there are excerpts that
you cant figure out where they belong, separate
those and go over them again at the end to see if
you need new categories. When you finish, place
each stack of notes into an envelope labeled with
the name of the theme.
Step Five: Create Your
Conceptual Schema: